Massive MIMO: Ten Myths and One Critical Question
Emil Bj\"ornson, Erik G. Larsson, Thomas L. Marzetta

TL;DR
This paper clarifies common misconceptions about Massive MIMO technology, dispels ten myths, and highlights a critical open research question essential for its practical deployment.
Contribution
It systematically debunks ten widespread myths about Massive MIMO and raises a key research question for future work.
Findings
Ten myths about Massive MIMO are identified and refuted.
Common misconceptions about antenna count and complexity are clarified.
The paper highlights a critical open research question for practical adoption.
Abstract
Wireless communications is one of the most successful technologies in modern years, given that an exponential growth rate in wireless traffic has been sustained for over a century (known as Cooper's law). This trend will certainly continue driven by new innovative applications; for example, augmented reality and internet-of-things. Massive MIMO (multiple-input multiple-output) has been identified as a key technology to handle orders of magnitude more data traffic. Despite the attention it is receiving from the communication community, we have personally witnessed that Massive MIMO is subject to several widespread misunderstandings, as epitomized by following (fictional) abstract: "The Massive MIMO technology uses a nearly infinite number of high-quality antennas at the base stations. By having at least an order of magnitude more antennas than active terminals, one can exploit…
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